| SolveYourProblem
Article Series: Yoga
I Want To Learn Everything About Yoga
What
Is The History Of Yoga?
The history of yoga began thousands of years
ago. Yoga was probably practiced in the Indus Valley civilization
in India, around 3000 BC, that is 5000 years ago, and may have
origins in much earlier practices. The Mohenjo-daro seals,
dating from around that time, show what many archaeologists
believe is a yogi seated in meditation, in a cross-legged posture
with his hands on his knees.
The first clearly written descriptions of yoga practice appear
in the Hindu religious texts the Bhagavad Gita and the Vedas,
but these were passed down through an oral tradition for many
centuries or even millennia before being written down between
approximately 500-150 BC.
Even though the authority of the Vedas themselves was not
accepted by other Indian religions such as Buddhist and Jain
theology, the influence of yoga is still felt in these religions.
It is not limited to orthodox Hindu spirituality.
However, the idea of joining body, mind and soul in cosmic
unity, a central theme of yoga philosophy, comes later, in
the Upanishads or Vedanta. And what we usually understand by
yoga in the West, hatha yoga, was developed by Swami Swatamarama
in the 15th century, only 600 years ago.
Swami Swatamarama's text is called the Hatha Yoga Pradipika.
It lists in detail all of the main asanas (postures), pranayama
(breath control), mudra (hand postures or seals) and bandha
(locks or binding postures, forms of mudra) that modern yoga
students will know.
Hatha is a Sanskrit word meaning force or violence, but in
yoga terms it may come from the two words 'ha' for sun and
'tha' for moon, representing complementary but opposing energies,
or two halves of a whole, a common theme in yogic philosophy.
In our lives we tend to let the mind be constantly attracted
by external objects and thoughts arising from what we see and
experience through our senses. Hatha yoga uses physical exercises
and postures known as asanas, along with pranayamas or regulation
of the breath, to bring the mind back into unity with the body
and soul. The breath is very important in yoga and is often
seen as the soul, or the element that carries the soul.
Asana means immovable or motionless, and asanas are static
postures, even if in some modern forms of yoga each one is
only held for a short time before moving into the next. Other
types of yoga may focus on movement itself, more like the Chinese
exercise forms of tai chi and xi gong, but the asanas of hatha
yoga are not motions.
Asanas develop strength, flexibility, balance and poise. Traditionally
they were practiced to clear the mind to prepare for meditation.
These days in the West we focus more on the physical and health
benefits of yoga and if meditation is practiced at the end,
it is seen as an add-on or final relaxation rather than the
vital part of yoga practice that it would have been considered
earlier in the history of yoga.
# # # # #
SolveYourProblem.com
: 2009
> Home > Yoga
Articles : Main Page
|